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Other conferences
Under Western Skies: Climate, Culture and Change in Western North
America
Extended Call for Papers and Added Keynote Speaker
MAUDE BARLOW, ANDREW NIKIFORUK, RICHARD WHITE, VANDANA SHIVA, LEO JACOBS,
MARY SIMON
October 13-16, 2010, Mount Royal University Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
The call for papers has been extended to March 1, 2010. We are especially
interested in additional proposals related to environmental issues in
Mexico or from private sector/corporate stakeholders, but we continue to
welcome any and all proposals that speak to the call.
Call For Papers
This interdisciplinary and cross-cultural gathering welcomes presentations
on the environmental challenges now faced by diverse populations, both
human and nonhuman, in the Western lands of Canada, the United States, and
Mexico.
Academics and other stakeholders from the wider community are invited to
participate in this urgent and compelling dialogue. The conference invites
academics from the humanities, social and natural sciences, as well as
activists, businesses, artists and others to speak across the boundaries
that conventionally divide them.
Since both the geographical and critical terrains at issue are
considerable, a wide array of topics and time periods is welcome. The
shared concern will be the interaction between humans and the natural
environment in the context of Western history, geography, climate change,
and commercial/sustainable development of lands and resources.
Possible directions may include, but are not restricted to, the following:
- sustainable economic development
- indigenous ways of knowing
- urbanization/suburban sprawl in the "New West"
- popular culture and the mass media
- literary or filmic representations of natural, urban or industrial environments
- government action/inaction on the environment
- ecofeminism
- environmental racism and justice
- ecological or ecocritical examinations of particular Western environs and climes
- specific issues such as the Cophenhagen Summit, Kyoto Protocol, or oil/tar sands development
- the borderlands of Canada / United States / Mexico
- environmental education in K-12, postsecondary and community contexts
- historical perspectives
- environmental activism
- environmental law and policy
Proposals of 250 words (attached to an email as a .doc or .docx file) can
be sent to either
Robert Boschman (
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) or Mario Trono (
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).
New Deadline for Submissions: MARCH 1, 2010
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Call for Papers
An Interdisciplinary Humanities and Social Sciences Conference
TEXTING OBAMA: politics/poetics/popular culture
7-10 September 2010
Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.
Hosted by English Research Institute, the Manchester Writing School at MMU and
The Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences Research
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Simon Gikandi, David Theo Goldberg, Bonnie Greer, Anna Hartnell, Ato Quayson, Patricia Williams.
Readings from Carol Ann Duffy, Jackie Kay and others
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CALL FOR PAPERS
2010
Transatlantic Studies Association Annual Conference at Van Mildert
College, Durham University, 12 – 15 July 2010
The Chairman of the TSA, Prof Alan Dobson (University of Dundee) and
Conference Chair for 2010 Prof John Dumbrell (Durham University) would
like to extend an invitation to the 2010 Transatlantic Studies
Association Conference.
2010 plenary speakers will be:
Mitch Lerner (Ohio State University) & Rob Kroes (University of
Amsterdam), plus a multi-disciplinary Roundtable on Vietnam and Transatlantic
Relations chaired by John Dumbrell (Durham University)
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Canadians
in the United States: American
Dreamers in their Social and Economic Context
An interdisciplinary Conference, 12-13
May 2010, Montréal
Relations with the United
States have been one of the foremost themes of Canadian
economics, history, and culture, if only because twentieth-century Canada is often
better understood in its continental context - better than in any other
perspective. But also because the Canadian intelligentsia has long explained
its own existence in terms of Canadian-American differences, in terms of a
ponderous American economic and cultural influence.
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